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I'm wanting to have a script that when I click in my scene, my player will rotate and have a force added to it and will travel until it has reached the clicked point in my scene.

Right now I have it working using Vectors and having my player lerp from one point to another. But I want to amend it so I can use physics and get a better sense of my player moving. Like have him speed up to start moving and slowing down as he reaches my target loction

My script now looks like this

public GameObject isActive;
public float speed;
public Ray ray;
public Rigidbody rigidBody;



public Vector3 targetPoint;
// Use this for initialization
void Start ()
{
    targetPoint = transform.position;
}

// Update is called once per frame
void Update ()
{


}

void FixedUpdate()
{
    if (Input.GetMouseButton(0)) 
    {
        targetPoint = Camera.main.ScreenToWorldPoint (Input.mousePosition);
        ChangeRotationTarget ();
    }

    Quaternion targetRotation = Quaternion.LookRotation (targetPoint - transform.position);
    transform.rotation = Quaternion.Slerp (transform.rotation, targetRotation, speed * Time.deltaTime);

    rigidbody.position = Vector3.Lerp(transform.position, targetPoint, speed * Time.fixedDeltaTime);
}


void ChangeRotationTarget ()
{
    Ray ray = Camera.main.ScreenPointToRay(Input.mousePosition);
    Plane playerPlane = new Plane (Vector3.up, transform.position);

    float hitdist = 0.0f;

    if (playerPlane.Raycast (ray, out hitdist))
    {

        targetPoint = ray.GetPoint (hitdist);
    }

}

However, when I run this, he just slides from one point to another. Regardless of the drag or mass I put in my rigidbody.

Can someone help me make my changes? Or point me in the right direction

2 Answers 2

1

I didn't had time to test this, but it should almost be what you are looking for. Just apply your Quaternion and Rotation codes to it.

void FixedUpdate() {

    if (Input.GetMouseButton(0))
    {
        targetPoint = Camera.main.ScreenToWorldPoint(Input.mousePosition);
        if (rigidBody.position != targetPoint)
        {
            reachedTargetPoint = false;
            if (reachedTargetPoint == false)
            {
                GetComponent<Rigidbody>().AddForce(speed);
            }
        }

        //zoneBeforeReachingTP should be how much units before reaching targetPoint you want to start to decrease your rigidbody velocity
        if (rigidBody.position == (targetPoint - zoneBeforeReachingTP))
        {
            //speedReductionRate should be how much of speed you want to take off your rigidBody at the FixedUpdate time rate
            rigidBody.velocity = speedReductionRate;
        }
            if(rigidBody.position == targetPoint)
            {
                rigidBody.velocity = new Vector3(0, 0, 0);
                reachedTargetPoint = true;
            }
            ChangeRotationTarget();
        }  
    }
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  • Interesting, but the code seems a little broken.. if (reachedTargetPoint == false) {} will always be false, since you set it on the line above. But I'm trying to figure out how to use the logic :)
    – Niclas
    Dec 7, 2017 at 9:20
  • Yeah! Sorry for the mistake! I really didn't had time to test this out, but you're right! Dec 29, 2017 at 21:22
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That's because you modify the rigidbody.position, and your logic overrides the physics. What you have to do instead is to ApplyForce every physics frame, probably with ForceMode.Force or ForceMode.Acceleration.

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